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My Christmas reading seemed to consist chiefly of books about people going or being mad. I finally got to the end of The Golden Notebook, which seems to have taken YEARS to finish – not that I wasn’t enjoying it, just that the end never seemed to get any closer, in the manner of radioactive half-life or something. With eighty pages to go and departure from the house for Christmas imminent, I resorted to slicing the book down the spine to take the unread portion, rather than drag 500+ pages of read novel with me.

Lessing dispatched, I read Poppy Shakespeare, by Clare Allan, on loan from someone in my writing group. It explores the relationship between N., a long term patient at a mental institution and new arrival Poppy, who insists she is sane. A fast read, but very well done, particularly the form Poppy has to fill in to claim her MAD money. Extract and review.

Next up was one of my Christmas presents, Wish Her Safe at Home by Stephen Benatar, a curious and frankly disturbing first person account of a woman who inherits her aunt’s house in Bristol, moves into it from London, and promptly goes crackers. It was first published in 1982, and has just come back into print: apparently the author has been doing a great job promoting it in bookshops throughout the south-east (and in fact this is how it was sold to the friend who bought it me for Christmas). Fascinating introduction from John Carey about how he regrets not making the case for it as a Booker judge that year. Short review (which does Persephone Books a slight disservice, since they do reprint books written by men, if the subject matter matches their criteria).

When I got back home I reread Ballet Shoes, to see how much of the plot I had forgotten while watching the new TV adaptation, which turned out to be not much. I thoroughly enjoyed the adaptation – particularly Victoria Wood, Richard Griffiths, and Harriet Walter. (The Somerville romance between Doctor Jakes and Doctor Smith was discussed: "Is that true?" my viewing companion asked doubtfully. "It is now," I said.) Yasmin Paige was smashing as Petrova, and Emma Watson was not disastrous cast against type as talented young actress Pauline. (Miaow!) Poor Mrs Simpson, though, sacrificed to give Marc Warren Grief and therefore Character.

Now I am reading the pile of Phryne Fisher novels that I bought with my Amazon vouchers. This current one has anarchists in it. Anarchists! I hope they turn out to be good; they’re getting a bad press in the narrative at the moment from Bert and Cec.

I have David Thomson’s The People of the Sea part-read. A collection of Gaelic folk tales about seals (or, rather, his journeys collecting them), it is far too poetic not to take my time over it rather than crashing through. I have Germs, Guns, and Steel and Collapse by Jared Diamond out of the library, but frankly I’m wondering whether life is not too short.

Date: 2008-01-04 06:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gair.livejournal.com
Hoorah for the lesbian doctors! (I was chiefly chuffed when I got my PhD because now [livejournal.com profile] gerald and I ARE the lesbian doctors out of Ballet Shoes). They are as true in the book as they are in the film, tell Mr: I too have just finished my re-read and they are pretty couply (they go on holiday together as a matter of course, when one of them is sick they both go away for her convalescence); also, the splendid butch monocle of joy appears to be canonical (at least in my illustrations).

We both hated the adaptation with the kind of fiery indignation we would usually reserve for JKR, though.

Ooh, and guess what I am reading? BUJOLD. She is UNBELIEVABLY BRILLIANT, I am profoundly in love with Miles (who is exactly like Blake, I am surprised it is not commented on more often), and I blame both you and [livejournal.com profile] gerald heartily for not making me read them sooner.

Date: 2008-01-04 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
BUJOLD! BUJOLD!!! We have no excuse for not making you read them sooner, we are simply Bad People.

We both hated the adaptation with the kind of fiery indignation we would usually reserve for JKR, though.

Oh no! For why? Was it the brutal murder of Mrs Simpson so that Garnie could have a happy-ending marriage? Or were there other things happening?

Date: 2008-01-05 10:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
PS If Posy is going to be in Prague at the outbreak of WW2, do you think she becomes an underground ballerina against Nazism like Audrey Hepburn?

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